After years of trying eye creams from multiple skincare brands, I’d given up on the hope that I could find one which actually delivered the benefits it promised. In fact, I honestly began to believe that eye cream was a marketing ploy from skincare and beauty companies designed to solely generate financial profits. Yet it was an unplanned purchase whilst I was on holidays in London which completely changed my mind – this article is a review of the Chanel Sublimage Ultimate Revitalization Eye Cream and why it has now become a permanent fixture in my skincare routine.
Over the course of a couple of days in June the skin under my eyes became severely irritated and dehydrated. Just prior to long-haul flights from Australia to Europe, I’d recently begun using a Vitamin A eye cream… whether it was a combination of the flights (which always dry out my skin) and this eye product, or whether I had inadvertently used my normal Retinol A skin serum up towards the eye area, the result was that my under-eye skin looked and felt damaged. I do have a sensitive skin type however something was visibly not right. My under-eye skin was peeling, and it had an overall crepey and thin texture. My normal moisturizer wasn’t going to be able to provide the intense hydration required so I decided I needed to purchase an eye cream whilst I was in London.
It was whilst walking around Harrods for the first time that I found myself walking over to the Chanel beauty & makeup concession. Chanel is one of my preferred brands when it comes to footwear and accessories, but I’ve never tried out their skincare range before. I was looking at the different skincare lines and after a quick check online and discussion with the sales assistant, I decided the Sublimage eye cream might be able to help me out.
Exceptional eye care claims by Chanel
Chanel describes their Sublimage eye cream as:
“An exceptional eye care that reveals the sublime power of the eyes. A cream texture with precious Éphémères of Planifolia, molecules with ultimate revitalising power, and a massage tool with draining and decongestant action. Immediately, the eye contour appears rested and radiant. After one month, smoother and more even. The eyes appear more open and regain their sublime power of expression. For an immediate boost in radiance, use SUBLIMAGE La Crème Yeux as a mask.”
What does it promise to do?
According to Chanel’s website, the brand notes:
With 12 combined actions, SUBLIMAGE La Crème Yeux intensely revitalises the eye contour, which is essential to express emotions. • Full of vitality and intensely moisturised, the eye contour appears radiant and healthy. • Stronger, the skin is visibly smoother and tighter. The eye contour is noticeably lifted, eyes are opened. • Rested, eyes are illuminated, while dark circles and puffiness appear faded. More even-toned, the eye contour reveals its own natural perfection.
After the first application, the eye contour looks rested and radiant. After one month, eyes appear to regain their power of expression.
What was my experience using this eye cream?
Immediately upon applying Chanel’s eye cream from their anti-ageing “Sublimage” range, the skin underneath my eyes felt noticeably calmed and hydrated. I used this morning and night (and used the recommended massaging technique with the Chanel spatula) and saw a visible improvement within a matter of days. After two weeks I was changing my opinion as to whether an eye cream could actually deliver tangible benefits.
A month later after returning home to Australia, I’d firmly decided that Chanel’s Sublimage Eye Cream was going to become a regular product in my skincare routine. I noticed that my under-eye skin had transformed. It looked brighter and there was a reduction in the depth and length of my under-eye wrinkles. I also felt like my skin was almost thicker although this may just be because it was no longer dehydrated.
How long does this product last?
This is going to depend upon how much product you personally like to apply. I will share that in the first few weeks of using the Sublimage eye cream, I was applying the product quite generously twice a day to help hydrate and repair the damage under my eyes. My first jar lasted 2 months and the second jar lasted 2.5 months. I do use this morning and night and some days I admittedly use a bit more than necessary. The sales assistant mentioned a jar lasted her around 5 months – this is obviously possible given limited use, possibly once a day. I feel I could extend the use out to 3 months for me personally if I paid a little more attention to the amount of product I apply.
Luxurious packaging
Chanel is a luxury designer brand and obviously their luxe aesthetic extends down to the finest details, including the packaging. Their eye cream is contained within a glass container and is accompanied with a product spatula which doubles as an applicator and under-eye area massage tool. Upon first opening the gold coloured box, there’s a guide booklet included which demonstrates the under-eye massage technique recommended by Chanel. Additionally, the eye cream product is sealed to retain its efficacy.
My overall thoughts on Chanel Sublimage Eye Cream
After regular twice daily use of this product for over 4 months, I can honestly share that my under-eye area has never felt or looked this good. It also works really well under makeup too, as long as you don’t go overboard with the amount of product you’re applying! And even though this is the most expensive product in my skincare routine – at $285 AUD for a 15g jar, it’s a product I don’t feel I want to discontinue using as the benefits it consistently delivers are so visible to me. I’d wholeheartedly recommend this eye cream to anyone who is looking for a product which brightens and delivers intense hydration to the under-eye area.
P.S – trialing the Sublimage La Crème moisturizer
I received a small sample of the Sublimage La Crème texture fine moisturizer with the eye cream purchase and was also very impressed with the benefits it imparted to my skin. The sample size provided enough product for me to use in the evening for just over a week and a half. I noticed my skin felt smoother & brighter, plus my pore size also seemed to be reduced as well. I had a sensitive dry patch on one of my cheeks that was taking a while to heal after a skin treatment and this moisturizer sped up the healing process as soon as I started using it, which was amazing to see.
This has been the best moisturizer I’ve ever used (and I’ve tried a range of different ones from pharmacy to high-end brands, including the famed La Mer moisturizer) in terms of how it felt and the benefits I experienced in such a short timeframe. The downside is it’s too steep a price for me to feel comfortable using regularly, at $535 AUD for a 50g jar. It would be a lovely gift for that special person in your life and it’s something I might purchase in the future as a one-off treat for myself.
I hope this review of Chanel’s Sublimage Eye Cream has helped you in case you’re considering purchasing it. If you have any questions, then feel free to ask me in the comments below!
10 years ago, I discovered the platform called Blogger and in just a few minutes, Flip & Style was live. My own space on the internet where I could write about anything I wanted and where the start of a little journey began, one which I didn’t even realise would go on for this long.
My topic of choice was fashion. I had somehow stumbled across fashion blogs such as Fashion Toast, Sea Of Shoes, Stylescrapbook plus several others I can’t quite remember the names of. All blogs that had only started within the past year or so themselves, but were just so amazing already. Despite thinking that I’ll never be as good as those girls, I’ll never be able to have what they have or look how they do, I still wanted to create a blog of my own. It looked too fun not to. I didn’t want to put my face to it just yet, so I decided to share pages from my favourite magazines. I moved on to creating my own magazine-style collages, sharing trends, items I found at online stores. My blog was my own magazine.
I never really expected anyone to read it, let alone find it. I just found the whole process so fun. Having a blog brought me so much happiness and I got so involved in every aspect of it. I was obsessed. I did Lookbook.nu, Chictopia, Tumblr, spent forever on Polyvore (I still do, love that site so much!). I joined blogging community websites, commented on other blogs, joined in on twitter conversations. The works. My blog ended up getting me so many internships and jobs that I probably wouldn’t have got otherwise. It’s been a huge part of my life and contributed to the experiences I’ve been able to have.
My blog has been on a roller coaster ride in terms of style throughout the years, as my personal style has changed so much and is still ever changing. I feel like it’s taken me so long to figure out who I am and what I like, but I believe I’m finally getting there. I always wish that I had saved each different logo and blog layout I’ve had throughout the years, but you’ll just have to take my word for it that some of them were really bad!
There are so many things that have ended up on my blog that I could cringe at or be embarrassed by, but I’m glad I never cared what people thought when it came to creating content, outfits, sharing my thoughts and ideas. I was always in my own blogging bubble, where nobody’s opinion even mattered because it was MY space. I’m sure there have been times when people have thought I’m a complete weirdo (who knows, they may still!), but here I am. Still going.
I’m surprised that no matter how often I change my blog, the name has always stuck. I may change it in future, but to this day I’ve never grown out of it. For those who don’t know, the name Flip & Style came from the idea of how you flip the pages of a magazine and style yourself with what you find 🙂 I can’t say I’m as into magazines as much as I used to be. I feel like I get so much inspiration from Pinterest, Tumblr, Instagram and other blogs these days that magazines just can’t compete. There’s still nothing though that beats the magic of spotting a cover that is just so beautiful you have to buy it.
Thank you to those of you who stick around no matter where I go or what I change, trust me, I notice. It’s the nicest feeling knowing that even if I disappear for a few weeks or even a few months at a time, there are still those people who are there when I return. That’s what makes this worth it and keeps me going 🙂
So… a decade of blogging. I wonder if I can push it to 20 years? (eek!)
These Grace Loves Lace Wedding Gowns are a Bohemian Bride's Dream
Not sure if I made the announcement here (I did on instagram so that certainly makes it official right?) but for those of you who don’t know… I am engaged! It has been the dreamiest, most loved-up few months of my life & I wish it could last forever! Thank you to everyone who has reached out to me and my fiancé Daniel, we feel so darn special. It truly is a magical time when you get engaged, such a surprise when that person get’s down on one knee, presents you with a 2 carat oval engagement ring or a cushion-cut diamond ring, and they ask that beautiful question. Perfect.
This is a truly unique & unforgettable time in my life so we are doing our best to soak up every single second as we only intend on doing this once (as you’d hope)! We might have to hire professional photography services from the likes wedding photographer Virginia Beach to capture all our special moments so that we can reminisce them later and feel special about them. That said, we’ll kick into planning mode soon but we want to enjoy ourselves just a little before diving in! I’m looking forward to planning the honeymoon especially, as we could go anywhere, just us two, the newlyweds! Maybe Paris? Italy? I’ll have to bring along some pheromones for women to make it extra special, or a few romantic things to make it a truly special time for us both.
Now if you’ve been following my wedding journey closely on social media there is no denying that I’ve been LOVING the wedding preparation. Whether I was picking out the cake, choosing a professional to handle wedding photography Rhode Island, or searching for a good dress, I thoroughly enjoyed the entire process. Speaking of wedding dresses, who knew there could be so many ways to recreate a white dress! To be honest, going into my first bridal shop was super daunting & somewhat stressful. I was super anxious that the dresses wouldn’t fit over my hips or that they would all be super unflattering on my size ten body. To my pleasant surprise this only happened once and I discovered a new love for wedding dress shopping. After covering a lot of our local designers, I decided to head up north to sunny Queensland to try on a brand that I have long been lusting over on wedding-inspired Pinterest boards – Grace Loves Lace.
Grace Love Lace epitomises the non-traditional, free-spirited and beach-loving bride. Their stunning range of lace gowns are effortless, unstructured and timeless. Lucky for me, I was able to runaway with some of my faves from the showroom to a secret Byron Bay beach with my good friend (and wedding photographer extraordinaire!) Beck Rocchi. The results of some epic light flare and a rugged backdrop were nothing short of incredible. I think this would have to go down as one of my all time favourite shoots, the only thing missing was my darling groom!
And in some exciting news for Grace Loves Lace fans (like me!) they are opening up a brand new Melbourne showroom next month. Yay! I know I’ll be popping by for a champagne and to try on the rest of their gowns because can a girl ever road test too many wedding gowns?
Keeping up with the latest fashion trends can be tricky, particularly in Victoria as we have been in lockdown! As you may know, nothing was open!
Fortunately our roadmap is looking optimistic and literally any day now the shop doors will fly open, which means we’ll be happily hitting the stores to get our fashion summer fix.
Over the past many weeks, with not much to do, I decided to do a big cleaning out of my wardrobe, out with the old and in with the new. These words ring so true this year than any other year I can remember. So I ask myself what is my look, has it changed, I’m a year older can I still wear what I’ve been wearing for the last few years. Ok, my look is classic, elegant, minimal and a little edgy. I have just answered my own question, I still feel comfortable about my own style personality. I do love a bit of an edge to some of my pieces, a subtle statement brings joy to me and my ensemble. The key is to be true to yourself if the item/outfit doesn’t feel right on you, then it probably isn’t.
Summer is now rapidly approaching, so I continue scouring the internet more often than the norm for some fashion style inspiration. Looking to see what other people are wearing overseas and what the models were walking down the runway in. There really is plenty for all to get excited about. Interesting and fun trends for our spring/summer 2020.
OK let’s take a look at how to start prepping your wardrobe for the new season ahead, by adding something fresh into your look for 2020.
COLOUR
Glow in Neon
Are you ready for a bright and vivid season? The colour of the season according to Valentino, led the neon explosion with a series of looks in green, fuchsia and yellow. Other designers such as Christopher Kane, added bright yellow, orange and pink. Dramatic, fun and definitely eye catching!
Pretty Pastels
Think baby blue, pink, lavender, peach, lemon and mint. Gorgeous lavender, delicate and calming and more sophisticated than some of the pinks and blushes we’ve seen in the past. For all the girls that love their blues, classic blue, heritage blue and faded blue are popping up on all the runways. If you love your neutrals, you won’t be missing out. You can also work your pastels with neutrals. White, grey and beige, these are most likely the neutrals that work best with pastels.
If you don’t want to look too baby doll in your pastels, only add the pastel shades as an accessory.
STYLE
Short Suiting
Short suits are the coolest spring/summer trend for 2020. This look is perfect to update your wardrobe. A relaxed and fun take on tailoring and has seen a resurgence on the catwalk for the last few seasons. Cut long and lean just below the knee or cut high on the thigh. Add a sleek thigh-length blazer and then add if you choose a vest for a progressive look.
Unexpected Pairing
The idea is that you wear something in an unexpected way or put together an unexpected combination. Mixing materials, colours, elements and textures. Stripes, dots, letters all in at once – time to get creative!
Jeans or pants worn under a dress. This look was big in 2017. Today I’m seeing pants under dresses. Try wearing a fitted button-through dress over your pants, by doing this it will more than likely create bulk, so undo the buttons from waist down. This will create a floaty look and will be flattering on the hips.
Bralettes
A fun look for the weekends or out to] lunch, you decide. Retailers are offering an array of cute and stylish options this summer, whether you decide to wear one over a t-shirt or under a jacket.
Linen
Stay cool in the summer heat with linen pieces. This year you’ll see more variations of linen or linen mix clothing in the stores. Anything from shorts to pants, dresses, shirts and jackets. In solid colour and beautiful prints.
Baby Doll Dress
Mini dress in the form of baby doll style. You’ll see this playful dress in variations of fullness and colour. The baby doll dress would great over a pair of jeans.
Oversized Sleeves
This Victorian-inspired look was seen last year and is still going strong. It’s oversized shape creates the illusion of a slimmer waist and adds lots of interest to your outfit.
Bucket Hats
Versatile, cute and this trendy accessory looks gorgeous in any season. For the warmer months, choose soft pastel shades. Also, look out for the bucket bag!
This was a question that flitted through my mind, when recently contemplating the manufacturing of silk. The fact that this lustrous fabric is made from the thread of silk worms is widely known; but that the silk worms die in the process is perhaps not. I mean, I'd never really thought about it!
The domesticated mulberry silkworm, Bombyx mori, is actually a mulberry leaf munching moth, which spins silk to make a cocoon for its transformation into an adult. The process of rearing silkworms, cultivating the eggs, and harvesting the silk is called sericulture, and happens continuously to keep up with demand. After the cocoon is made, they are steamed or dipped into hot water to kill the worm and keep the threads soft. It takes a lot of silk worms to make one silk shirt - approximately 1000. Somewhat mitigating the sacrifice of the worms in the process is that being high in protein, they are commonly eaten in these silk producing countries.
This is an ancient practice that has been happening for thousands of years…there was a reason that The Silk Road became uber famous and silk is still huge business for China, India, Uzbekistan, Brazil, Japan, Korea, Thailand and Vietnam.
Recently though, some organizations have called for the ban of silk production and the wearing of silk unethical.
Vegans, and maybe Buddhists would no doubt agree but others may have questions… Do silk worms even feel pain? They are invertebrates after all and the science is still undecided on that. Are they conscious? During my research, I even came across the title of a paper called ‘The search for invertebrate consciousness’ by Jonathan Birch, which caused simultaneous amusement and a certain weariness. Aside from the fact that this title could be the next big thing on a t-shirt, all the ethical dilemmas people have to face these days just eating, shopping, living is exhausting!
The problem has no doubt been exacerbated by the huge industrial scales at which things are produced in modern society, in which processes and conditions for animals and workers are quite often inhumane. So therefore, maybe the answer is actually to reduce our consumption. Buy more carefully, keep things and value them. So if we do buy a beautiful silk dress we will have it forever and maybe even hand it down as a vintage item to be treasured.
There are several lovely, pre-worn silk items for sale on the Wynsum Look store. I think that to recycle these items and continue to treasure them gives value to the life of the (few thousand) silkworms who were sacrificed in the process.
Sunbutter's vegan and ocean-friendly sunscreen is saving our reef one – THE FASHION ADVOCATE
‘Slip, slop, slap’ has been the Australian summer anthem for as long as I can remember. At primary school, sun safety was big, and as a kid, sunscreen was a daily-slathered staple over summer. I learnt the hard way that sunscreen was a non-negotiable in the Queensland summer sun, and while my generation lathered up to protect ourselves, we weren’t protecting our oceans.
An estimated 14,000 tonnes of sunscreen ends up in our oceans worldwide every year, and scientists now know that the chemicals found in sunscreen are harmful to our precious marine life. The ingredient oxybenzone, in particular, leaches coral of its nutrients and bleaches it white, and it also damages the development of fish and marine wildlife. Oxybenzone has been found in sea turtle eggs and the fish we eat. It’s no longer just an issue for our oceans; it’s an issue for our food chain too.
Sacha Guggenheimer and Tom Hiney have set out to solve the ocean’s issues with sunscreen, and their reef-safe suncare range, SunButter, is saving our sealife one swim at a time.
Sacha and Tom started small, and they handmade their original sunblock for the whale shark guides, photographers, divers and fishmen of the Ningaloo Reef. SunButter has since expanded, and it’s now an Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration-approved, SPF50, 4-hour water-resistant and reef-safe sun care range.
Sacha and Tom share my passion for protecting our oceans, and they’re determined to grow a socially and environmentally ethical skincare company driven by their mantra, ‘Protecting people and oceans’. SunButter offsets its carbon emissions through native tree planting in Australia and New Zealand with Green Fleet Australia, and they donate 10% of profits or 1% of sales, whichever is greatest, to creating a better planet and future for all.
From a beauty perspective, it ticks all my toxin-free boxes too. SunButter is made with certified sustainable ingredients, it’s vegan and reef-safe, it contains no nanoparticles, no sunspheres (Nano Plastic Particles), and it’s made in Australia in a solar-powered facility. SunButter tins are also reusable, BPA free and recyclable. Tick, tick, tick.
Every now and again, a beauty brand comes along that surprises me with its social and environmental impact from every angle – packaging, ingredients and effectiveness, and SunButter is one of those.
How much fun was The Park! The Pony Bar and Motel was smaller than we remembered from the previous Melbourne Cup carnivals, but it still offered us some great photo backdrops. With a couple of beds thrown into The Pony Bar to make it a motel, seating space was a little awkward and reduced. The beds did invite you to lie back and relax! Unfortunately for most fashionistas, our outfits didn’t allow us to do that!
Fashion Photo Opportunities
The Pony Bar and Motel could have been closer to the FOTF (Fashions on The Field) stage so we could enjoy it more. Even a minute’s walk to the bar was a feat, especially for those wearing heels! More importantly, we would miss out on the fashion action on the stage if we ventured too far away. Maybe next year, it will be back to how we knew it. Here’s hoping!
The front entrance remained the same with the leafy arches. This spot is always a favourite for photos. TAB and Dyson had activations within The Park precinct with their automated cameras. TAB’s 360-degree video camera was fun, but the lighting was only on one side. You could get your hair styled within the Dyson enclosure. After, you could get a wide-angle video in their video room to share on social media.
Style & Fun at the Melbourne Cup Carnival
The music stage is where the FOTF enclosure was in previous years. By the end of the day, fashionistas were dancing away to the talent on stage. It was one way to keep warm in what was probably the coldest Melbourne Cup Carnival ever! It was such a pity that the coldness got to me. I missed the band Sneaky Sound System because I went home! Judging by the crowd around the stage, there must have been some good musicians entertaining them.
The Stables consisted of three shipping containers converted into photo booths. These were so much fun! Some just stood inside and got photos (me included). Others put some effort into their poses, using the backdrops in a fun way! Each photo booth had a different theme. One photo-booth had a mirror on one wall. One photo booth was set up like a hotel reception. One photo booth had a bed up the back wall. The only bad thing about these photo booths was that the floor got super dirty very quickly with mud and grass!
What’s a Melbourne Cup Carnival if you don’t take a million photos? The Park precinct was the place to be if you were after fun photos to remind you of your time there. My favourite backdrop was on the outside wall of the Pony Bar and Motel. There was half a Volks Wagon bus protruding outwards. The pink, mint green and cream colour tones were just beautiful!
Here are some snaps of fashionable people having fun within The Park precinct. Enjoy.
We have never been ‘floor boards in bedroom’ people. Josh and I always talk about how cosy it is to step into a lush carpeted bedroom and even though our beach house is, well, at the beach, the sandy feet isn’t stopping us from carpeting that renovation either.
I am the worst at selecting anything that involves colour and thankfully, Cassie (my interior designer, in case you haven’t been following along) selected everything for me. I don’t know what it is about the fear of colour for me, perhaps it’s the commitment and I get scared I can’t turn back! Either way, my bedroom is very neutral, warm yet cool and ultra comfy.
The bedroom revolved around two things, the arch door way, which was origionally not in the plans. It was a fire place wall, with the arch and I was going to square the room off (Take away the angle where the arch is) and add a steel french door into the WIR. I was also going to have my bed on the opposite side wall, but because we worked out we could keep the arch and make it a walk way into the WIR, it soon became the ‘hero’ and I was happy to move my bed to another wall.
The second main feature for this room was always going to be my Bromley paintings. I am a huge fan of David Bromley, I got my first piece of art (the Hillary, that is in my living room) for my 30th birthday, 8 years ago and since then, I have collected more. The birds for the bedroom were a custom comission pieces and were very thoughtful for this room. In fact, I origionally wanted David to do a wall mural on my bed head wall, maybe one day!
The bed head was designed to accompany the artwork and was a custom bed head by Bonne Nuit which also pays tribute to the soft roundness touch points that are found in the house.
All up, I adore my bedroom, I love that I spend so much time in a room that has so much of its heritage details, from the skirting, to the detailed ceilings and thick architraves to the colourful lead light window.
Touching back on my earlier conversation to you about being scared to commit to colour, well, upstairs is pretty basic. I wanted to keep the boys bedrooms as minimal as possible while they are young and as they grow, I could look at adding some paint to their walls and tune in to their individual personalities. For now, I added some temporary wall decals from Pickawall for each of their rooms with a little hint of what they love right now.
We actually have a 5th bedroom that is our spare bedroom but one day would like to turn in to a sitting room for Josh, something masculine and chesterfield-y, if you know what I mean.
Fashion new year's resolutions that will change your style
The start of a new year is always the perfect time to make a few resolutions. And whilst going to the gym regularly and ensuring you get more sleep are definitely goals worth pursuing it’s also worth noting that reassessing your style is also one area in your life that might be worth reevaluating. Considering the fact you have to deal with your wardrobe every single day it makes sense to ensure that it’s working for you as best as possible to guarantee that only do you look and feel great everyday, but also to avoid having to contend with regular style meltdowns to get there. To help you get started here are a few fashion new year’s resolutions that are definitely worth adopting…
Invest in the best quality pieces you can afford
Think about the workhorses of your wardrobe, the items that are constantly on rotation. Are they well made and built to last? If the answer is no, then it’s time to make a conscious effort to invest a little more in the clothes that you wear all the time to ensure longevity. This means things like a beautiful coat, a flattering pair of go-to jeans and an LBD. These are the building blocks of a functional wardrobe, and once you’ve found pieces that work and that you love, you need to ensure they will be around for a long time.
Have a fail-safe outfit combination
For those times when a fashion crisis hits it’s important to have at least one outfit combination to turn to that you know is guaranteed to work no matter what. This will obviously differ according to your individual style. A structured dress and classic flats may work for one person whilst a pair of jeans, tee and a blazer may work for someone else. The key is pinpointing what makes you look good every single time you wear it, then have it at the back of your mind as a back up for those times when you’re feeling uninspired.
Keep your wardrobe organised
It really is easier to get dressed when you can see everything in you closet. Being able to assess what you own at a glance can often make pulling together a look a faster process as you avoid wasting time trying to find a long lost t-shirt or the skirt you wore last weekend but now can’t find. I keep my wardrobe organised like this but it’s important to come up with a system that is easy for you to maintain. To avoid having to do epic clean ups make a point of putting things away as soon as you get home at the end of the day as that way your closet stays neat all the time.
Embrace outfit planning
Yes it does require a bit more time and effort but making a point of organising your outfits ahead of time can help you avoid throwing everything you own on the floor in a panic every morning. If you really want to be ultra organised invest in a rack that you can hang the week’s ensembles on, ironed and ready to go. There’s actually something quite satisfying about seeing your clothes nicely lined up within easy stress-free reach.
Take at least one fashion risk a month
It’s great to have a clear idea of your style but sometimes you can stumble upon new looks simply by making a conscious effort to think outside the box. Eschew your favourite pieces one day a month and pull out pieces that you rarely wear and see how you can make them work. This could also mean wearing a vibrant shade you wouldn’t usually turn to or accessories that you usually only wear with a specific look. You may find an outfit combination you never knew you always wanted.
Shop more consciously
This takes willpower but stopping yourself from buying something simply because you’ve seen a sale email pop up in your inbox or spotted a dress in a window can often lead to a more wearable wardrobe. Considered shopping ensures that everything you own is something that you love and will work back with what’s already sitting in your closet. By making this your shopping mantra it also saves you wasting your money on pieces you’ll only wear once and instead allow you to direct funds to purchasing quality and timeless items that will get constant use.
A Fay Archive jacket featuring the signature 4 “ganci.” Fay Archive
The vaunted French nose has spent 30 years devising best-selling fragrances for the world’s leading luxury brands. Can he work his magic reimagining the world’s best-selling fragrance, Dior Sauvage?
The perfumer dips a tester into one of the tiny glass vials aligned on the desk in front of him. There are dozens of them, with labels identifying various dilutions of compounds such as methyl geranate, phenyl acetate, and akigalawood. He brings the paper to his nose and inhales. “Once in a while, I try to introduce my palette to new ingredients, to see if they’re interesting enough to create something with,” Francis Kurkdjian says. “Most of the time, they’re not.” With that, he tosses the strip into the trash.
To be a perfumer is to be a lifelong learner. Science advances, ingredients run out, regulations governing what you can use (or can’t) change. But Kurkdjian’s high standards and boundless curiosity have helped the 55-year-old become one of the industry’s best-known and most prolific noses, as those in the profession are often called. Since 2021, he has been Dior’s perfume creation director; before that, he cofounded his own house, Maison Francis Kurkdjian, and spent more than 25 years helping other companies articulate their olfactive identities. His hundreds of commissions—Jean-Paul Gaultier’s Le Male, Kenzo World, and Carven Pour Homme among them—have generated many millions of dollars for luxury’s leading lifestyle companies. Along the way, his increasing renown has helped bring perfumers from behind the scenes and into the spotlight.
“It’s a profitable business when you make a name for yourself, without a doubt,” says Robert Burke, CEO of luxury consultancy Taylor/Burke Communications. “In the past, brands oftentimes didn’t talk about who their perfumer was—it used to be a little more like a private label. Now, it’s a selling point.” And selling is the operative word. According to Statista, a sort of Google for market researchers, the global fragrance market will reach nearly $60 billion in revenue in 2024. Last year, LVMH reported that its perfumes and cosmetics division, of which Dior is the biggest player, moved over $8.2 billion worth of products.
Sauvage Eau Forte, in the foreground, is the fifth member of Dior’s highly lucrative line of men’s fragrances. Dior
In September, Kurkdjian will unveil his most significant project to date, and his first men’s fragrance for Dior: Sauvage Eau Forte. It’s a follow-up to Sauvage, a sensual and uncommonly long-lasting men’s eau de toilette designed in 2015 by Kurkdjian’s predecessor, François Demachy. And the stakes for this new flanker (the industry term for an iteration of a flagship scent) couldn’t be higher. Since 2022, the original Sauvage has been the world’s best-selling fragrance, men’s or women’s, surpassing even longtime champ Chanel No. 5. It’s estimated a bottle of Sauvage is sold every three seconds.
Still, selecting a fragrance is a deeply personal, even emotional, decision. Kurkdjian’s challenge was to make a big tent even bigger by offering a new—but not radically different—vision of something millions of men around the world already wear.
He started the project—where else?—at a desk covered in vials. Though a team of two associate perfumers works just down the hall from his office in Paris, one gets the sense that Kurkdjian prefers solitude. When I later ask one of his friends if Kurkdjian is shy or just French, they respond, “He’s shy. And French. Double whammy.”
But one-on-one, Kurkdjian is supremely self-assured, armed with the type of confidence you expect to see in a surgeon or first responder. “I don’t feel the pressure, to be honest, because I decided not to feel the pressure,” he says, in reference to the various demands of his role, including devising bestsellers, overseeing the other perfumers, managing Dior’s relationship with its flower growers in Grasse (the raw-materials capital of the French fragrance industry), and even training store associates how to express his ideas. “It’s not a job you can handle if you’re afraid, because fear is unproductive.”
Kurkdjian rarely steps foot in the lab; instead, he tests fragrance compounds and writes out formulas at his desk. Tiphaine Caro
Fortunately for Kurkdjian, he comes from brave stock. On both sides of his family are relatives who immigrated to France from the former Ottoman Empire early in the 20th century to avoid political persecution; his maternal great-grandmother and grandmother only narrowly escaped the Armenian genocide.
To instill a sense of pride in their heritage, Kurkdjian’s parents took him and his two siblings to the Armenian Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Paris every week. He still attends regularly. “When I’m in my final box, that’s where I’ll go,” Kurkdjian says, with a slight smile at his own gallows humour.
But the family also put a premium on a French sense of personal style and savoir faire. He remembers his mother buying fabric used in past-season Chanel collections to make her own suits. It didn’t hurt that one of her best friends, Françoise, was a petite main who once made dresses in Dior’s couture atelier. After Kurkdjian’s mother died in 2013, Françoise, now 87, became a surrogate aunt—but she has long been a link to the man whose memory Kurkdjian is now tasked with upholding. Because she worked closely with Monsieur Dior himself, Kurkdjian still calls her “whenever I need to fact-check something.”
As a teenager, Kurkdjian stole spritzes of his father’s small selection of classic colognes, which included the fresh, citrusy Dior Eau Sauvage, released in 1966 and unrelated (in the olfactory sense) to the 2015 scent, as well as the suave, vanilla-forward Pour un Homme de Caron. His mother wore perfume in what was then a novel way: different scents for different occasions, seasons, and moods, instead of a single signature. “She was loyal to my father, but she was never loyal to perfumes,” Kurkdjian jokes.
At first, he thought he’d be a ballet dancer—“I wanted to be Nureyev,” he says—but he failed the rigorous entrance exam to the Paris Opera Ballet School. Then, for a time, he thought he could be a couturier, until he came to grips with the fact that he couldn’t draw.
Photo: Tiphaine Caro
When he was 14, he became fascinated with a collection of perfume samples his sister had put together. A few years later, Kurkdjian saw a magazine article about fragrances that sealed the deal. He remembers feeling jealous of the perfumers on the page and wanted to join their ranks. “I was choosing my life,” he says, before paraphrasing a quote from Jean-Paul Sartre: “‘Choosing not to choose is still choosing.’ And this is, like, almost tattooed in my brain. I don’t know if I always make good decisions, but I make decisions.”
In 1994, two years after Kurkdjian graduated from ISIPCA, a fragrance school in Versailles, the industry was dominated by a small handful of huge companies. Designers in need of new scents would send out requests for proposals, and perfumers would enter a knock-down, drag-out fight to win the bid. Thirty years later, not much has changed.
“They still make perfumers compete against each other, even within the same house,” says Dawn Goldworm, an olfactive expert who has been friends with Kurkdjian for over 20 years. “So at Firmenich, you have a lot of perfumers competing against each other on projects,” she explains, referring to the leading French firm, “but they’re also competing against perfumers at Givaudan, International Flavors & Fragrances, and Takasago. It doesn’t really create a collaborative spirit.”
A chance meeting with the executive who owned Jean-Paul Gaultier’s fragrance license would produce one of the industry’s most consequential partnerships. At the time, Kurkdjian was just 25 years old and had enrolled in a master’s degree program at Paris’s Institute of Luxury Marketing. Gaultier was soliciting bids from the major houses for a new men’s fragrance. His brief was to evoke the seductive side of clean sweat, something Kurkdjian later described as “the idea of sensuality where you want to practically bite into a man’s skin.” The exec gave him three weeks to submit a formula as a sort of training exercise; Kurkdjian had never designed a fragrance outside the classroom. He took the assignment anyway—and won.
Nearly everything at Parfums Christian Dior—including Kurkdjian’s sweater and his custom testing strips—bears the French brand’s logo. Tiphaine Caro
His composition used lavender, mint, vanilla, and a hint of cumin to conjure the musky aroma the designer was after—and it beat designs from far more experienced perfumers. Housed in a torso-shaped bottle clad in a striped sailor motif (Gaultier’s idea), Le Male quickly became a sensation, notable for how different it was from other men’s scents on the market, which generally conformed to generic ideas about masculinity: You could smell either clean, like a fraternity pledge getting ready for Friday night (à la Davidoff’s Cool Water or Issey Miyake’s L’eau d’Issey Pour Homme), or powerful, in the vein of an old-money financier (think Creed’s Green Irish Tweed). Le Male was far more nuanced—a little sweet, a little floral, yet undeniably masculine. Released in 1995, it was perfectly positioned for the metrosexual trend of the late ’90s and early aughts, which heralded changing ideas about what it meant to be a man.
“It was a unique combination of the freshness of lavender with the warmth of the vanilla and amber in the base—it was very modern smelling,” says Sebastian Jara, a fragrance consultant in San Francisco. Though Kurkdjian’s initial formula has since spawned 55 flankers, Jara notes that people still wear the original. “It’s one of the icons of the perfume industry,” he says.
Le Male also made Kurkdjian an overnight star in his field. “Most perfumers at 25 don’t have the breadth or the facility to do a global bestseller,” Goldworm says. “Francis is an anomaly, because he’s just brilliant.”
But Kurkdjian learned early that success can come at a cost. In short order, a rumour went around Paris that his formula was selected only because he was sleeping with Gaultier.
“It was not true,” Kurkdjian clarifies, obviously still hurt by the accusation, even if it was partly based on a simple misunderstanding: “Jean-Paul had a boyfriend at the time whose name was the same as mine—Francis.” He believes the rumour stuck because “in France, people don’t like success. Success is always suspicious.”
Though he should have been on top of the world, he began avoiding industry events, socialising only with a tight circle of trusted friends. Even now, decades later and at the height of his powers, the lesson still lingers. Kurkdjian will go as far as to confirm that he’s gay, but he won’t divulge anything else about his romantic life to the press.
His work is another story, and Le Male opened the door to plenty of it. It helped him land a job as a perfumer for Quest, a Dutch-owned company later acquired by Givaudan, where he created a string of best-selling and critically acclaimed bottles: Elizabeth Arden’s Green Tea, in 1999; Lancôme’s Miracle Homme, in 2001; Narciso Rodriguez for Her, in 2003. He even devised two scents for Dior’s halo line of fragrances, La Collection Privée, in 2004.
It wasn’t just his early successes that made Kurkdjian stand out. Perfumers are a small community, by some estimates numbering as few as 200 professionals. “Many people use the analogy that there are more astronauts than perfumers,” says Linda G. Levy, president of the Fragrance Foundation, a New York-based trade group.
“There’s a stereotype of who [can be a perfumer], and perhaps a lack of welcoming into the industry,” she says. Though that has begun to change, when Kurkdjian’s star was on the rise, his peers were mostly straight, older men descended from families in or near Grasse whose members had made fragrances for generations. Kurkdjian was a young gay man with no connection to the industry, outperforming the other guys and making it look easy.
One factor has long leveled the playing field: Most perfumers aren’t widely credited for their work. It’s something that seemed unfair to Marc Chaya, a finance and strategy executive who was a partner at Ernst & Young in 2004, the year he met Kurkdjian at a birthday party for a mutual friend. “When I learned that he was the man behind some of these beautiful perfumes that I already had in my collection, I was very intrigued and surprised,” Chaya says.
They became fast friends, quickly learning they had a lot in common: They were both gay and wildly successful; Chaya, who’s Lebanese, saw overlaps in their families’ histories. And they were both hungry to work for themselves instead of making heaps of money for other people. “I guess we met at a time where we were both looking for something, and we found an answer in each other,” Chaya adds.
In 2009, the two formally became business partners, launching Maison Francis Kurkdjian, for which Chaya serves as CEO. From its inception, Chaya ensured Kurkdjian would receive credit for his compositions, because his name would be on every distinctively faceted bottle.
“We know fashion designers by their names, but we know fragrances by the name of the fragrance,” says Lana Todorovich, president and chief merchandising officer at Neiman Marcus, the first retailer to carry the maison’s fragrances in the United States. “They were both on a pretty significant mission to actually bring to light the incredible talent of perfumers.”
Chaya, who stayed with the company after LVMH acquired it in 2017, believes there’s still a way to go. “I’m not sure that many people know who Alberto Morillas is. I’m not sure that many people know who Calice Becker is, or who Jean-Claude Ellena is, or Christine Nagel,” he says, referring, respectively, to the creators of Calvin Klein’s CK One, Dior’s J’adore, Terre d’Hermès, and Jo Malone’s Wood Sage & Sea Salt. “It’s about time we respect what they’ve done.”
Kurkdjian has long compared what he does, especially for other brands, to being an actor. The briefs are like scripts, and exploring a new fragrance’s mood or avatar lets him step into identities he wouldn’t otherwise occupy—say, the modern London gentleman with a classic sense of style (Mr. Burberry) or the off-duty mogul just trying to put his workweek behind him (Armani Mania).
The job gives Kurkdjian a far bigger stage than he ever would have had as a ballet dancer. He calls leading Dior’s fragrance department the role of a lifetime—one he has been able to make entirely his own. “It’s not even work,” he insists.
Still, he takes pains to keep the businesses separate. Some of that is down to confidentiality, but other aspects stem from personal preference. Take flowers, for example. “I don’t put them so much at the forefront in my own house, but at Dior, they’re part of the founding act,” he says, referencing Christian Dior’s love of gardening and his practice of modeling dresses after various blooms. “They’re the DNA of the brand. So at Dior, I love working with flowers.”
He calls the Sauvage franchise “the story of lavender being the core flower of masculine perfume,” which he attributes to its use in traditional British shaving tonics. It’s the shared ingredient among all five iterations of the scent. (In addition to the fresh, citrusy, and woody original eau de toilette, François Demachy, Kurkdjian’s predecessor, made three more concentrated flankers that play up different elements of the flagship.) But if the original is smooth and urbane, Kurkdjian’s Sauvage Eau Forte is both fresher and more complex: a little green, a little peppery, with an earthy undercurrent like a warm breeze rolling through a desert oasis. Dior has leaned heavily into the imagery of water in its marketing for the scent, because Eau Forte uses water as its base instead of alcohol. The result—in addition to its opaque white appearance—is that the initial expression lasts longer than traditional scents, which tend to evolve over the course of the day.
During a span of about 10 months, Kurkdjian created 120 versions of the scent before arriving at the final formula. Though he won’t say which ingredients hit the cutting-room floor, the ultimate makeup includes a “cold spice” accord (it smells of elemi, cardamom, and black pepper), bleached lavender, and musky, woody notes. What he will say is that he rarely steps foot in the lab. He’s old-school, still writing out all his recipes with pencil and paper and handing them off to be mixed by one of his team. (“I am super lazy,” he admits. “And when you are lazy, you need efficiency, because you need things to run fast.”)
It’s one of several charming idiosyncrasies he has developed. He no longer drives because the traffic in Paris has gotten so bad that he can’t safely satisfy his need for speed. Every morning, instead, he’s driven to one of his two offices—Dior or Maison Francis Kurkdjian—around seven o’clock.
Sauvage Eau Forte, Kurkdjian’s first men’s scent for Dior. Tiphane Caro
He hasn’t worn fragrances since he was in perfume school, where he was taught not to distract his nose from the formula in front of him. Occasionally, he’ll give scents he’s working on a test run or put something on for the odd party. Otherwise, his brain starts to work—and not in the good way. “Like, ‘Is that good enough? You should have done that. Why don’t you try this?’ So it’s not fun.”
He confirms the rumour that his nose is insured, though he won’t say for how much, which is one of many indications as to just how vital his role is to the bottom line. LVMH’s 2023 investor report lists four strategic priorities across its fragrance and beauty business. No. 2 is: “Focus on developing Parfums Christian Dior in harmony with couture.”
“I think it’s telling that that’s how important Christian Dior perfumes are in the entire portfolio of brands,” says Burke, the consultant. “For a brand like Dior, the fragrance category is absolutely key and a significant part of the business.”
So, yes, there’s serious money at stake. But despite the aggressive revenue targets, his ambitious schedule (he’s already working on fragrances for 2026), and the knowledge that thousands of people depend on his success, Kurkdjian tries not to take his work—or himself—too seriously.
“It’s important to put everything in perspective,” he says. “It’s just perfume. We’re not saving lives. We’re trying to make life even more beautiful.”
Scents of Occasion
Francis Kurkdjian is a firm believer in the olfactive wardrobe, the notion that you can be scented 24/7 for a range of moods and purposes. Here’s how five of his notable formulas square with what’s already in your closet.
The Wool Topcoat: Mr. Burberry Eau de Parfum
Courtesy of Burberry
You might not wear this earthy, spice-laden fragrance year-round, but it’s an indispensable and versatile layer in the fall.
The Oxford-Cloth Button-Down: Maison Francis Kurkdjian Amyris Homme
Maison Francis Kurkdjian
Rosemary, cedar, and the titular Caribbean shrub combine to create an eau de toilette that’s as crisp and comforting as a clean white shirt.
The Peak-Lapel Tuxedo: Christian Dior La Collection Privée New Look
Courtesy of Christian Dior
Kurkdjian’s only Dior project without flowers is filled with soapy aldehydes, amber, and frankincense—the scent of masculine chic, bottled.
The Cashmere Crewneck: Maison Francis Kurkdjian Grand Soir
Courtesy of Maison Francis Kurkdjian
Soft, warm, and uniquely enveloping, this eau de parfum’s amber-vanilla accord has an alluring edge thanks to notes of resinous benzoin.
The Dressing Gown: Carven Pour Homme Eau de Toilette
Courtesy of Carven Parfum
A refined and relaxed blend of violet leaf, sandalwood, sage, and vetiver, codesigned with perfumer Patricia Choux.